But still, it remains; When we say that I know a fact, the statement of my fact is encoded in my brain. Not the referent, not an argument for that statement, just: a statemen
So you say. Many would say that you need the argument (proof, justification, evidence) for a true belief for it to qualify as knowledge.
Obviously, this doesn’t prevent me from saying that I know something without an argument.
You can say that you are the Queen of Sheba.
It remains the case that knowledge is not lucky guessing, so an argument, evidence or some other justification is required.
Yes, but this is completely and totally irrelevant to the point I was making, that:
I will profess that a statement, X, is true, if and only if “X” is encoded in a certain manner in my brain.
Yet “X is true” does not mean “X is encoded in this manner in my brain.”
So you say. Many would say that you need the argument (proof, justification, evidence) for a true belief for it to qualify as knowledge.
Obviously, this doesn’t prevent me from saying that I know something without an argument.
You can say that you are the Queen of Sheba.
It remains the case that knowledge is not lucky guessing, so an argument, evidence or some other justification is required.
Yes, but this is completely and totally irrelevant to the point I was making, that:
I will profess that a statement, X, is true, if and only if “X” is encoded in a certain manner in my brain.
Yet “X is true” does not mean “X is encoded in this manner in my brain.”